1. Are you bringing the following into Freedonia?...
...(4) Any items you have been requested from someone else to bring into Freedonia
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1. Are you bringing the following into Freedonia?...
...(4) Any items you have been requested from someone else to bring into Freedonia
Any items you have been requested by someone else to bring into Freedonia ---"Someone else" means anyone besides yourself. Your spouse, parent, or child is also included as "someone else."
wagyl wrote:...If, however, this poll is just to ask what a government means when it says "someone else" on a customs form, my answer would be that they mean it as broad as they can get away with: anyone else.
"(4) Any items you have been requested from SOMEONE ELSE to bring into Jipangu"
(4) Any items you have been requested from someone else to bring into Jipangu
wagyl wrote:I don't really see the reason for the question which was put to you. Do they just want to complain to the creator of the current version of the document that their tame gaijin on a leash says that it doesn't include the ambiguity they want?
wagyl wrote:"the reason for the question"...Or even worse, complain to the scumbags they caught out that they have a tame gaijin on a leash who disagrees with the scumbags?
Customs Form: Who is 'someone else'?
(4) Any items you have been requested from someone else to bring into Jipangu
> Why the "someone else" question was asked:
> The client is the defense for an American tourist who is charged with
> violating the Customs Law (for false declaration: she ticked No to Question
> (4) while she had souvenirs in her suitcase that had been put by a friend
> traveling with her)
>
> Customs: She should have ticked Yes;
>
> Defense: She did not tick falsely because "a friend traveling with" is not
> "someone else"
>
with a firm grasp of the English language and experience in international movement of goods and understanding the underlying reasons behind these regulations.
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